We have collection of more than 1 Million open source products ranging from Enterprise product to
small libraries in all platforms. We aggregate information from all open source repositories.
Search and find the best for your needs. Check out projects section.

Platform

Dotenv is a zero-dependency module that loads environment variables from a .env file into process.env. Storing configuration in the environment separate from code is based on The Twelve-Factor App methodology.As early as possible in your application, require and configure dotenv.

Ruby gem to handle settings for ActiveRecord instances by storing them as serialized Hash in a separate database table. Namespaces and defaults included. Version 2 is a complete rewrite and has a new DSL, so it's not compatible with Version 1. In addition, Rails 2.3 is not supported anymore. But the database schema is unchanged, so you can continue to use the data created by 1.x, no conversion is needed.

Electron lacks an easy way to persist and read user settings for your application. electron-json-storage implements an API somehow similar to localStorage to write and read JSON objects to/from the operating system application data directory, as defined by app.getPath('userData'). You can require this module from either the main or renderer process (with and without remote).

Synchronize settings, keymaps, user styles, init script, snippets and installed packages across Atom instances. It currently does not support automatic backup - it must be done manually. Only the restore is being triggered automatically.

LicensePlist is a command-line tool that automatically generates a Plist of all your dependencies, including files added manually(specified by YAML config file) or using Carthage or CocoaPods. All these licenses then show up in the Settings app. Download from Releases, then copy to /usr/local/bin/license-plist etc.

Electron doesn't have a built-in way to persist user preferences and other data. This module handles that for you, so you can focus on building your app. The data is saved in a JSON file in app.getPath('userData').You can use this module directly in both the main and renderer process.

Easy-to-use tools for software projects that have dynamic configuration settings where values may vary per deployment environment (dev, test, production, etc.). Includes Excel workbook and export tool that writes to various XML formats.

This project consists of -An ASP.NET webservice that acts as a host for a chat program. -A WPF client application, that uses the webservice to transmit/receive messages etc. -A Silverlight client that allows users to log in from a website.

Are you tired of recreating the same option dialog logic for each Windows Phone app every time? "Your Last Options Dialog" is an attempt to create a generic, highly configurable implementation you can easily pull into your own app and set up for your needs quickly. It's extens...

It will replace single-line comments // and multi-line comments /**/ with whitespace. This allows JSON error positions to remain as close as possible to the original source.Also available as a gulp/grunt/broccoli plugin.

A common approach is to store this data in a .settings file, and read and update it as needed. This involves writing a lot of boilerplate code to copy that data back and forth. This code is generally tedious, error prone and no fun to write.Jot uses a more compact declarative approach; instead of writing code that copies data back and forth, you declare which properties of which objects you want to track, and when to persist and apply data. This is a better abstraction for this requirement, resulting in more readable and concise code for this requirement.

dynaconf a layered configuration system for Python applications - with strong support for 12-factor applications and Flask app.config extension. Dynaconf will look for variables in the following order (by default) and you can also customize the order of loaders.